Not yet ready to commit to the Full version? Bored of all the cue card sets for the language you are studying? Well, if you simply like us on Facebook we will give you a few extra cue card sets for free!

Available in the Android and Windows Phone versions.

Simply tap on a “facebook-locked” cue card set and then tap the Like button. Don’t forget to type in a nice comment to tell your friends all about CueBrain. Then hit the Back button and more cue card sets will be unlocked.

The modern simplistic metro-style ui was started by Windows Phone, and now has become more popular in other mobile platforms. We’ve decided to finally ditch the odd-shaped buttons and move towards a cleaner look. Starting with the Android version of CueBrain…

Android has this neat concept called widgets. You can add parts of your favorite apps to the desktop and they will show you periodically updating content.

CueBrain (6.03.006) now supports this too! Every time you make a mistake during a quiz, the cue card is recorded on your phone. If you add a CueBrain widget to the desktop, it will cycle through the cue cards you had trouble with. How cool is that?

Learn language vocabulary the fun and easy way with quizzing from the ‘Brain, which automatically puts words that you chose incorrectly back into the pile. Once you play with a set of cue cards, they will be etched into your memory!

Features a drum machine for positive reinforcement and ghost replay of your best time.

As much as it is cool that Android lets you use 3rd party apps for text-to-speech, they sure don’t make it easy. This is mostly “for your protection”, as these text-to-speech apps have access to any text that you give them to read.

Svox has some great voices that work very well with CueBrain. Yes, the default text-to-speech that ships with Android is very basic and doesn’t sound good.

Please don’t ding CueBrain for this in the Android reviews as we have no control over or desire to write text-to-speech engines — this is another lifetime of work.

Gps

We collect your coarse gps location whenever you complete a quiz session in CueBrain. This is uploaded to the server to make the global leaderboards more interesting (for example, an English speaker in England learning French can compete against a French speak in France learning English, etc).

It is important to note that this gps location is not exact:

On Android, we use the network location (which is typically limited to the neighborhood you are in, or your cell phone providers nearest cell tower).